This is a bugfix release for the current MySQL Community Server production release family. It replaces MySQL 5.0.77.
Functionality added or changed:
Security Enhancement:
To enable stricter control over the location from which
user-defined functions can be loaded, the
plugin_dir
system variable has
been backported from MySQL 5.1. If the value is nonempty,
user-defined function object files can be loaded only from the
directory named by this variable. If the value is empty, the
behavior that is used prior to the inclusion of
plugin_dir
applies: The UDF
object files must be located in a directory that is searched by
your system's dynamic linker.
(Bug#37428)
A new status variable,
Queries
, indicates the number
of statements executed by the server. This includes statements
executed within stored programs, unlike the
Questions
variable which
includes only statements sent to the server by clients.
(Bug#41131)
Previously, index hints did not work for
FULLTEXT
searches. Now they work as follows:
For natural language mode searches, index hints are silently
ignored. For example, IGNORE INDEX(i)
is
ignored with no warning and the index is still used.
For boolean mode searches, index hints are honored. (Bug#38842)
Bugs fixed:
Important Change: Security Fix: Additional corrections were made for the symlink-related privilege problem originally addressed in MySQL 5.0.60. The original fix did not correctly handle the data directory path name if it contained symlinked directories in its path, and the check was made only at table-creation time, not at table-opening time later. (Bug#32167, CVE-2008-2079)
See also Bug#39277.
Security Enhancement:
The server consumed excess memory while parsing statements with
hundreds or thousands of nested boolean conditions (such as
OR (OR ... (OR ... ))
). This could lead to a
server crash or incorrect statement execution, or cause other
client statements to fail due to lack of memory. The latter
result constitutes a denial of service.
(Bug#38296)
Incompatible Change:
There were some problems using DllMain()
hook functions on Windows that automatically do global and
per-thread initialization for
libmysqld.dll
:
Per-thread initialization: MySQL internally counts the
number of active threads, which causes a delay in
my_end()
if not all threads have
exited. But there are threads that can be started either by
Windows internally (often in TCP/IP scenarios) or by users.
Those threads do not necessarily use
libmysql.dll
functionality but still
contribute to the open-thread count. (One symptom is a
five-second delay in times for PHP scripts to finish.)
Process-initialization:
my_init()
calls
WSAStartup
that itself loads DLLs and
can lead to a deadlock in the Windows loader.
To correct these problems, DLL initialization code now is not
invoked from libmysql.dll
by default. To
obtain the previous behavior (DLL initialization code will be
called), set the LIBMYSQL_DLLINIT
environment
variable to any value. This variable exists only to prevent
breakage of existing Windows-only applications that do not call
mysql_thread_init()
and work
okay today. Use of LIBMYSQL_DLLINIT
is
discouraged and is removed in MySQL 6.0.
(Bug#37226, Bug#33031)
Incompatible Change:
SHOW STATUS
took a lot of CPU
time for calculating the value of the
Innodb_buffer_pool_pages_latched
status variable. Now this variable is calculated and included in
the output of SHOW STATUS
only if
the UNIV_DEBUG
symbol is defined at MySQL
build time.
(Bug#36600)
Incompatible Change:
In connection with view creation, the server created
arc
directories inside database directories
and maintained useless copies of .frm
files
there. Creation and renaming procedures of those copies as well
as creation of arc
directories has been
discontinued.
This change does cause a problem when downgrading to older server versions which manifests itself under these circumstances:
Create a view v_orig
in MySQL 5.0.72 or
higher.
Rename the view to v_new
and then back to
v_orig
.
Downgrade to an older 5.0.x server and run mysql_upgrade.
Try to rename v_orig
to
v_new
again. This operation fails.
As a workaround to avoid this problem, use either of these approaches:
Dump your data using mysqldump before downgrading and reload the dump file after downgrading.
Instead of renaming a view after the downgrade, drop it and recreate it.
The downgrade problem introduced by the fix for this bug has been addressed as Bug#40021. (Bug#17823)
Replication: When rotating relay log files, the slave deletes relay log files and then edits the relay log index file. Formerly, if the slave shut down unexpectedly between these two events, the relay log index file could then reference relay logs that no longer existed. Depending on the circumstances, this could when restarting the slave cause either a race condition or the failure of replication. (Bug#38826, Bug#39325)
In example option files provided in MySQL distributions, the
thread_stack
value was
increased from 64K to 128K.
(Bug#41577)
SET PASSWORD
caused a server
crash if the account name was given as
CURRENT_USER()
.
(Bug#41456)
The
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SCHEMA_PRIVILEGES
table was limited to 7680 rows.
(Bug#41079)
In debug builds, obsolete debug code could be used to crash the server. (Bug#41041)
CHECK TABLE ... FOR
UPGRADE
did not check for incompatible collation
changes made in MySQL 5.0.48 (Bug#27562, Bug#29461, Bug#29499).
This also affects mysqlcheck and
mysql_upgrade, which cause that statement to
be executed. See
Section 2.18.3, “Checking Whether Tables or Indexes Must Be Rebuilt”.
(Bug#40984)
See also Bug#39585.
Some queries that used a “range checked for each record” scan could return incorrect results. (Bug#40974)
See also Bug#44810.
Certain SELECT
queries could fail
with a Duplicate entry
error.
(Bug#40953)
The FEDERATED
handler had a memory
leak.
(Bug#40875)
IF(..., CAST(
as
an argument to an aggregate function could cause an assertion
failure.
(Bug#40761)longtext_val
AS
UNSIGNED), signed_val
)
Prepared statements allowed invalid dates to be inserted when
the ALLOW_INVALID_DATES
SQL
mode was not enabled.
(Bug#40365)
mc.exe is no longer needed to compile MySQL on Windows. This makes it possible to build MySQL from source using Visual Studio Express 2008. (Bug#40280)
Support for the revision
field in
.frm
files has been removed. This addresses
the downgrading problem introduced by the fix for Bug#17823.
(Bug#40021)
If the operating system is configured to return leap seconds
from OS time calls or if the MySQL server uses a time zone
definition that has leap seconds, functions such as
NOW()
could return a value having
a time part that ends with :59:60
or
:59:61
. If such values are inserted into a
table, they would be dumped as is by
mysqldump but considered invalid when
reloaded, leading to backup/restore problems.
Now leap second values are returned with a time part that ends
with :59:59
. This means that a function such
as NOW()
can return the same
value for two or three consecutive seconds during the leap
second. It remains true that literal temporal values having a
time part that ends with :59:60
or
:59:61
are considered invalid.
For additional details about leap-second handling, see Section 9.6.2, “Time Zone Leap Second Support”. (Bug#39920)
The server could crash during a sort-order optimization of a dependent subquery. (Bug#39844)
With the ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
SQL mode enabled, the check for nonaggregated columns in queries
with aggregate functions, but without a GROUP
BY
clause was treating all the parts of the query as
if they were in the select list. This is fixed by ignoring the
nonaggregated columns in the WHERE
clause.
(Bug#39656)
The server crashed if an integer field in a CSV file did not have delimiting quotes. (Bug#39616)
Creating a table with a comment of 62 characters or longer caused a server crash. (Bug#39591)
CHECK TABLE
failed for
MyISAM
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables.
(Bug#39541)
InnoDB
could hang trying to open an adaptive
hash index.
(Bug#39483)
For a TIMESTAMP
column in an
InnoDB
table, testing the column with
multiple conditions in the WHERE
clause
caused a server crash.
(Bug#39353)
The server returned a column type of
VARBINARY
rather than
DATE
as the result from the
COALESCE()
,
IFNULL()
,
IF()
,
GREATEST()
, or
LEAST()
functions or
CASE
expression if the result was
obtained using filesort
in an anonymous
temporary table during the query execution.
(Bug#39283)
References to local variables in stored procedures are replaced
with
NAME_CONST(
when written to the
binary log. However, an “illegal mix of collation”
error might occur when executing the log contents if the value's
collation differed from that of the variable. Now information
about the variable collation is written as well.
(Bug#39182)name
,
value
)
Some recent releases for Solaris 10 were built on Solaris 10 U5,
which included a new version of libnsl.so
that does not work on U4 or earlier. To correct this, Solaris 10
builds now are created on machines that do not have that
upgraded libnsl.so
, so that they will work
on Solaris 10 installations both with and without the upgraded
libnsl.so
.
(Bug#39074)
With binary logging enabled CREATE
VIEW
was subject to possible buffer overwrite and a
server crash.
(Bug#39040)
Queries of the form SELECT ... REGEXP BINARY
NULL
could lead to a hung or crashed server.
(Bug#39021)
Statements of the form INSERT ... SELECT .. ON
DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
could result in a server crash.
(Bug#39002)col_name
=
DEFAULT
Column names constructed due to wild-card expansion done inside a stored procedure could point to freed memory if the expansion was performed after the first call to the stored procedure. (Bug#38823)
Repeated CREATE
TABLE ... SELECT
statements, where the created table
contained an AUTO_INCREMENT
column, could
lead to an assertion failure.
(Bug#38821)
If delayed insert failed to upgrade the lock, it did not free
the temporary memory storage used to keep newly constructed
BLOB
values in memory, resulting
in a memory leak.
(Bug#38693)
A server crash resulted from concurrent execution of a
multiple-table UPDATE
that used a
NATURAL
or USING
join
together with FLUSH
TABLES WITH READ LOCK
or ALTER
TABLE
for the table being updated.
(Bug#38691)
On ActiveState Perl, mysql-test-run.pl --start-and-exit started but did not exit. (Bug#38629)
Server-side cursors were not initialized properly, which could cause a server crash. (Bug#38486)
Stored procedures involving substrings could crash the server on certain platforms due to invalid memory reads. (Bug#38469)
A server crash or Valgrind warnings could result when a stored procedure selected from a view that referenced a function. (Bug#38291)
Incorrect handling of aggregate functions when loose index scan was used caused a server crash. (Bug#38195)
Queries containing a subquery with DISTINCT
and ORDER BY
could cause a server crash.
(Bug#38191)
Queries with a HAVING
clause could return a
spurious row.
(Bug#38072)
Use of spatial data types in prepared statements could cause memory leaks or server crashes. (Bug#37956, Bug#37671)
The server crashed if an argument to a stored procedure was a subquery that returned more than one row. (Bug#37949)
When analyzing the possible index use cases, the server was incorrectly reusing an internal structure, leading to a server crash. (Bug#37943)
A SELECT
with a NULL NOT
IN
condition containing a complex subquery from the
same table as in the outer select caused an assertion failure.
(Bug#37894)
For InnoDB
tables, ORDER BY ...
DESC
sometimes returned results in ascending order.
(Bug#37830)
If a table has a BIT NOT NULL
column
c1
with a length shorter than 8 bits and some
additional NOT NULL
columns
c2
, ..., and a
SELECT
query has a
WHERE
clause of the form (c1 =
, the
query could return an unexpected result set.
(Bug#37799)constant
) AND c2 ...
Nesting of IF()
inside of
SUM()
could cause an extreme
server slowdown.
(Bug#37662)
The MONTHNAME()
and
DAYNAME()
functions returned a
binary string, so that using
LOWER()
or
UPPER()
had no effect. Now
MONTHNAME()
and
DAYNAME()
return a value in
character_set_connection
character set.
(Bug#37575)
TIMEDIFF()
was erroneously
treated as always returning a positive result. Also,
CAST()
of
TIME
values to
DECIMAL
dropped the sign of
negative values.
(Bug#37553)
See also Bug#42525.
mysqlcheck used
SHOW FULL
TABLES
to get the list of tables in a database. For
some problems, such as an empty .frm
file
for a table, this would fail and mysqlcheck
then would neglect to check other tables in the database.
(Bug#37527)
The <=>
operator could return incorrect results when comparing
NULL
to DATE
,
TIME
, or
DATETIME
values.
(Bug#37526)
Updating a view with a subquery in the CHECK
option could cause an assertion failure.
(Bug#37460)
Statements that displayed the value of system variables (for
example, SHOW VARIABLES
) expect
variable values to be encoded in
character_set_system
. However,
variables set from the command line such as
basedir
or
datadir
were encoded using
character_set_filesystem
and
not converted correctly.
(Bug#37339)
For a MyISAM
table with CHECKSUM =
1
and ROW_FORMAT = DYNAMIC
table
options, a data consistency check (maximum record length) could
fail and cause the table to be marked as corrupted.
(Bug#37310)
The max_length
result set metadata value was
calculated incorrectly under some circumstances.
(Bug#37301)
CREATE INDEX
could crash with
InnoDB
plugin 1.0.1.
(Bug#37284)
Certain boolean-mode FULLTEXT
searches that
used the truncation operator did not return matching records and
calculated relevance incorrectly.
(Bug#37245)
The NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES
SQL
mode was ignored for
LOAD DATA
INFILE
and SELECT INTO ... OUTFILE
.
The setting is taken into account now.
(Bug#37114)
On a 32-bit server built without big tables support, the offset
argument in a LIMIT
clause might be truncated
due to a 64-bit to 32-bit cast.
(Bug#37075)
If the server failed to expire binary log files at startup, it could crash. (Bug#37027)
The code for the ut_usectime()
function in
InnoDB
did not handle errors from the
gettimeofday()
system call. Now it retries
gettimeofday()
several times and updates
the value of the
Innodb_row_lock_time_max
status variable only if ut_usectime()
was
successful.
(Bug#36819)
Use of CONVERT()
with
GROUP BY
to convert numeric values to
CHAR
could return truncated
results.
(Bug#36772)
A query which had an ORDER BY DESC
clause
that is satisfied with a reverse range scan could cause a server
crash for some specific CPU/compiler combinations.
(Bug#36639)
Dumping information about locks in use by sending a
SIGHUP
signal to the server or by invoking
the mysqladmin debug command could lead to a
server crash in debug builds or to undefined behavior in
production builds.
(Bug#36579)
The mysql client, when built with Visual Studio 2005, did not display Japanese characters. (Bug#36279)
When the fractional part in a multiplication of
DECIMAL
values overflowed, the
server truncated the first operand rather than the longest. Now
the server truncates so as to produce more precise
multiplications.
(Bug#36270)
A read past the end of the string could occur while parsing the
value of the
--innodb-data-file-path
option.
(Bug#36149)
Host name values in SQL statements were not being checked for
'@'
, which is illegal according to RFC952.
(Bug#35924)
The UUID()
function returned
UUIDs with the wrong time; this was because the offset for the
time part in UUIDs was miscalculated.
(Bug#35848)
SHOW CREATE TABLE
did not display
a printable value for the default value of
BIT
columns.
(Bug#35796)
mysql_install_db failed on machines that had
the host name set to localhost
.
(Bug#35754)
Dynamic plugins failed to load on i5/OS. (Bug#35743)
Freeing of an internal parser stack during parsing of complex stored programs caused a server crash. (Bug#35577, Bug#37269, Bug#37228)
The max_length
metadata value was calculated
incorrectly for the FORMAT()
function, which could cause incorrect result set metadata to be
sent to clients.
(Bug#35558)
Index scans performed with the sort_union()
access method returned wrong results, caused memory to be
leaked, and caused temporary files to be deleted when the limit
set by sort_buffer_size
was
reached.
(Bug#35477, Bug#35478)
If the server crashed with an InnoDB
error
due to unavailability of undo slots, errors could persist during
rollback when the server was restarted: There are two
UNDO
slot caches (for
INSERT
and
UPDATE
). If all slots end up in
one of the slot caches, a request for a slot from the other slot
cache would fail. This can happen if the request is for an
UPDATE
slot and all slots are in
the INSERT
slot cache, or vice
versa.
(Bug#35352)
For InnoDB
tables, ALTER TABLE
DROP
failed if the name of the column to be dropped
began with “foreign”.
(Bug#35220)
perror on Windows did not know about Win32 system error codes. (Bug#34825)
EXPLAIN
EXTENDED
evaluation of aggregate functions that
required a temporary table caused a server crash.
(Bug#34773)
Queries of the form SELECT ... WHERE
failed
when the server used a single-byte character set and the client
used a multi-byte character set.
(Bug#34760)string
= ANY(...)
See also Bug#20835.
Using OPTIMIZE TABLE
as the first
statement on an InnoDB
table with an
AUTO_INCREMENT
column could cause a server
crash.
(Bug#34286)
mysql_install_db failed if the server was
running with an SQL mode of
TRADITIONAL
. This program now
resets the SQL mode internally to avoid this problem.
(Bug#34159)
Changes to build files were made to enable the MySQL distribution to compile on Microsoft Visual C++ Express 2008. (Bug#33907)
The mysql client incorrectly parsed statements containing the word “delimiter” in mid-statement.
This fix is different from the one applied for this bug in MySQL 5.0.66. (Bug#33812)
See also Bug#38158.
For a stored procedure containing a SELECT * ... RIGHT
JOIN
query, execution failed for the second call.
(Bug#33811)
Previously, use of index hints with views (which do not have indexes) produced the error ERROR 1221 (HY000): Incorrect usage of USE/IGNORE INDEX and VIEW. Now this produces ERROR 1176 (HY000): Key '...' doesn't exist in table '...', the same error as for base tables without an appropriate index. (Bug#33461)
Cached queries that used 256 or more tables were not properly
cached, so that later query invalidation due to a
TRUNCATE TABLE
for one of the
tables caused the server to hang.
(Bug#33362)
Some division operations produced a result with incorrect precision. (Bug#31616)
mysql_upgrade attempted to use the
/proc
file system even on systems that do
not have it.
(Bug#31605)
mysqldump could fail to dump views containing a large number of columns. (Bug#31434)
Queries executed using join buffering of
BIT
columns could produce
incorrect results.
(Bug#31399)
ALTER TABLE CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET
did not
convert TINYTEXT
or
MEDIUMTEXT
columns to a longer
text type if necessary when converting the column to a different
character set.
(Bug#31291)
For installation on Solaris using pkgadd
packages, the mysql_install_db script was
generated in the scripts
directory, but the
temporary files used during the process were left there and not
deleted.
(Bug#31052)
Several MySQL programs could fail if the HOME
environment variable had an empty value.
(Bug#30394)
On NetWare, mysql_install_db could appear to execute normally even if it failed to create the initial databases. (Bug#30129)
The Serbian translation for the
ER_INCORRECT_GLOBAL_LOCAL_VAR
error was corrected.
(Bug#29738)
XA transaction rollbacks could result in corrupted transaction states and a server crash. (Bug#28323)
The BUILD/check-cpu build script failed if gcc had a different name (such as gcc.real on Debian). (Bug#27526)
On Windows, Visual Studio does not take into account some x86
hardware limitations, which led to incorrect results converting
large DOUBLE
values to unsigned
BIGINT
values.
(Bug#27483)
SSL support was not included in some “generic” RPM packages. (Bug#26760)
In some cases, the parser interpreted the ;
character as the end of input and misinterpreted stored program
definitions.
(Bug#26030)
The Questions
status variable
is intended as a count of statements sent by clients to the
server, but was also counting statements executed within stored
routines.
(Bug#24289)
For access to the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
table, the
server did not check the SHOW
VIEW
and SELECT
privileges, leading to inconsistency between output from that
table and the SHOW CREATE VIEW
statement.
(Bug#22763)
The FLUSH
PRIVILEGES
statement did not produce an error when it
failed.
(Bug#21226)
A race condition between the mysqld.exe server and the Windows service manager could lead to inability to stop the server from the service manager. (Bug#20430)
mysqld_safe
would sometimes fail to remove
the pid file for the old mysql
process after
a crash. As a result, the server would fail to start due to a
false A mysqld process already exists...
error.
(Bug#11122)
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